Daily Mail

CRYPTO COLLAPSE

Founder quits as failure of FTX exchange sends shockwaves through industry

- By Calum Muirhead

THE founder of stricken cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX quit in humiliatio­n yesterday as his company collapsed.

sam Bankman-Fried – once touted as the sector’s wunderkind – resigned as the firm filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in a Delaware court.

the filing will allow FTX to continue operating while it assesses its options.

But 30-year-old Bankman-Fried, better known by his initials SBF, will be replaced as chief executive by John J Ray III, a restructur­ing expert who previously oversaw the bankruptcy of notorious energy trading giant Enron. the nowformer chief executive will remain at FTX, however, to assist with an ‘orderly transition’.

the filing includes the firm’s American business, FTX.Us, as well as Bankman-Fried’s trading arm Alameda Research and around 130 other affiliated companies. FTX’s collapse came after a last-ditch effort to raise £8bn in rescue funding amid a rush of customer withdrawal­s failed, sending shockwaves across the crypto industry.

Bitcoin, the world’s biggest cryptocurr­ency, fell back below $17,000 having earlier in the week dropped below $16,000 for the first time in two years. Just a year ago, it peaked at $68,000.

the debacle forced BankmanFri­ed to issue yet another humiliatin­g apology.

‘I’m really sorry, again, that we ended up here,’ the chief executive wrote on twitter.

the admission came after Bankman-Fried admitted he had ‘f***ed up’ earlier this week as the business scrambled to save itself from collapse.

It appeared to have been on the cusp of salvation after archrival Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange with an estimated value of around £255bn, announced a shock takeover swoop to save the company from a cash crunch.

But the planned purchase was quickly abandoned, with Binance citing concerns around FTX’s business practices as well

as investigat­ions by Us regulators. FtX’s collapse marks a stunning fall from grace for Bankman- Fried, whose net worth was estimated at around £22bn earlier this year.

Named as the world’s richest person under 30 last year, the crypto entreprene­ur previously attracted the likes of tony Blair and Bill Clinton to a crypto conference in the Bahamas.

Founded in 2019, FtX was once valued at £27bn and was lauded for stepping in to save other crypto firms when the market began to crash.

But those rescue deals are thought to be among the major causes of FtX’s collapse.

shares in other crypto-focused companies took a hit, with banking group silvergate Capital sliding 5.6pc on Wall street and bitcoin miner Riot Blockchain remaining flat. Others likely to be stung by the bankruptcy are major FTX investors including Japanese giant SOFTBANK, which was reported to be drawing up plans to write down its £85m investment in the group.

One beneficiar­y, however, was rival crypto exchange Coinbase, which jumped 10.8pc as investors believed the firm was better placed to weather the growing crisis in the crypto market.

there is growing scrutiny from regulators about FTX’s operations and the possible causes of its collapse. Watchdogs in Australia, Japan and the Bahamas, where the exchange is based, have previously taken action as worries about the state of the company began to mount.

the Us securities and Exchange Commission also recently expanded its own investigat­ion into FTX which is thought to include probes into the company’s crypto-based lending products and its management of customer funds.

Meanwhile, the rapid failure of FTX will intensify fears that contagion could spread across the £850bn digital asset sector and potentiall­y hit the wider financial system.

Earlier this week, Binance boss Changpeng Zhao warned that a ‘cascading’ crisis could engulf the crypto sector and that more companies may soon fail.

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